17 listings
There are 17 hidden gem activities & tours in Noosa on thegood.guide. These include Alexandria Bay, Beach Access 29, beach access points 26. All listings are editorially reviewed with real Google reviews and opening hours.

Noosa's open secret. Alexandria Bay is a secluded stretch of golden sand at the southern end of Noosa National Park, worth every step of the 45-minute bush walk in from Parkedge Road. Arrive at sunrise, leave the dog at home, and pack your own sunscreen.
View listing →
Steep timber steps cut through coastal rainforest to a quieter stretch of Sunshine Beach. The access rewards the effort with noticeably fewer people at the bottom. Go light on gear and earlier than you think you need to.
View listing →
A staircase descent to Sunshine Beach that doubles as the southern entry point for the Noosa National Park trail. Limited street parking means rideshare is often the smarter call. Dogs welcome, views good on the way down.
View listing →
The tide surges into hollowed granite below and churns like something boiling. Just 300 metres from the Noosa National Park entrance, fully paved and accessible, with dolphins, surfers, and Laguna Bay spread out beneath you. Park near Hastings Street if you're visiting on a weekend.
View listing →
A free natural rock pool on the Noosa headland, reached by an hour's coastal walk and a sketchy scramble off the main path. Clear water, baby fish, ocean views. Go at sunrise before the crowds arrive and the magic evaporates.
View listing →
A 15-minute walk from Noosa National Park's entrance earns you a beach covered in smooth granite boulders, reliable solitude, and the occasional dolphin sighting. The coastal views back along the headland are worth the detour alone. Bring a board if the swell cooperates.
View listing →
The clifftop at the end of Noosa National Park's coastal trail, where humpback whales, dolphins, and turtles make regular appearances below. About 8km return via the Tanglewood loop. Park on Hastings Street and walk the boardwalk in — the main car park fills before 8am.
View listing →
Fifteen minutes along the Noosa boardwalk from Main Beach, Little Cove rewards the walk with calm, clear water and softer sand than Tea Tree Beach. Small, occasionally windy, and unpatrolled. The trade-off for skipping the crowds is a bit of legwork.
View listing →
Fifteen minutes of walking earns you a full sweep from the Glass House Mountains to the coast. The track is mostly paved, the views hold even on overcast days, and the flowering bushes smell like warm honey on the way up. Go at sunset.
View listing →
A glow room, shadow puppets, and a rotating program of contemporary art that takes itself seriously without losing the kids. Noosa Regional Gallery punches above its size, especially during NAIDOC weekends when Kabi Kabi cultural experiences come to the forecourt.
View listing →
Margo once called a sold-out K'gari tour back until a spot opened, then rang the visitor to tell them. The beach wheelchair loan programme gets people into the surf who thought that wasn't possible anymore. Staffed by volunteers who actually know Noosa. Start here.
View listing →
Woodland paths, calm river beaches, and late-afternoon light that makes wedding photographers go weak at the knees. Dogs on leash are welcome, the ferry jetty is right there, and Hastings Street is a short walk away. Arrive early. Parking is a genuine fight.
View listing →
A sea cave formation in Noosa National Park that earns its views. The descent is steep, spray-soaked, and genuinely challenging at high tide. Limestone pools, dramatic cliff faces, and zero crowds if you time it right. Proper footwear is non-negotiable.
View listing →
Squeaky white sand, clear water, and a ten-minute walk from the Noosa main beach crowds. Tea Tree Bay sits inside Noosa National Park on Track 4, protected enough for easy swimming, quiet enough to actually hear the waves. Parking is limited, so arrive early or walk from town.
View listing →
A giant grinning pelican on the Noosa River foreshore, standing watch since the 1990s. The surrounding park, riverside walk, and Pelican Boat Hire's 60-year-old hire fleet make this stretch of Gympie Terrace one of Noosaville's most reliably good afternoons.
View listing →
A five-kilometre beach walk to Stumers Creek starts here, with on-lead dogs to the left and off-lead to the right. The park itself is beside the point. Sunrise from the sand is the real reason locals set an early alarm.
View listing →
A solid MTB network out in Tentin with trails for all levels and terrain that holds up in most conditions. Weekdays are reliably quiet. The signage is patchy, so download a trail map before you go. No bins, no toilets — pack everything in, pack everything out.
View listing →